Prince Rupert Daiiy News Wednesday, January y, iii (f Justness & j-rojc. i building workers which came (CLOSURE TIME 10 m.m. on day of publication) Classified Advertising Is payable In advance. Please refrain from telephoning. Classifieds 3c per Vvord per Insertion, minimum charge 50c. Birth Notices 50c. Cards of Thanks, Death Notices. Funeral Notices, Marriage and Engagement. Announcements $2.00. , SPECIAL DISPLAY, DOUBLE 1'RICE. MARGARET McL OITOMKTIflST Room io STONE IiUII.DlN( FOR RENT FOR RENT- Bed-sittingroom for two (lirh. Meats to be arrang ed. Phone Red 141. ( lOpi FOR RENT Room in heated apartment for quiet gentle-' man. Box 2ii5, Daily News (tine) FOR RENT General Electrie floor uoiLshrs. $1 ner day. Fhure Bine 0u2. Pacific Electric. tf) HOUSE FOR RKNT Furniture for sale Box 263 Daily News. (dp, r OK KENT Two sleeping rooms. large quiet. Single working men only. Drinkers or partv-makers nerd not apply. 806 Fraser (new management). HOp i WAVIIO TO RKNT WANTED Housekeeping suite, one or two rooms with sink, etc. Quiet. For C.N.R, fireman. by January 15. Write F. D. Wilband, C.N. Shops, or phone 71 (7ci URGENTLY required by Gov.ern- ment employee Three or four , room furnished or unfurnished house or apartment. Phone Green 973. (8c . WANTED TO RENT 2 or 3 room apartment or house. Green I 48(i. (7pi ! : ROUTE BOYS I WANTED ; Good routes available for right kind of carrier boys or girls at Daily News office wtli increased remuneration alter rir.st of year. ACCOUNTANTS PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT. Income Tax sneeiallst. S O. Fork. Shine Building. Red 593. (20m! LOST AND HUM) CARPENTERS Hiv all of four mi lcd on our lit mum margin. inif, nttn m4 r'tinr. Ttirr'U ut ilin, JL ItlM. -j PRECISION SAW FILING 1.1(5 PK-COTT I'LACK Box 1011 Station U AKPiit: Bus Terminal Island City Builders John F. L. Hughes, D.C. CHIROPRACTOR. Hrs.: 10:30-12:30. 2.0,0-5:00 Kves.: by appointment only 21 - 23 Ei sner Block Phone W'. 441 scott McLaren CHARTERKD ACCOUNTANT fames Blcvk 003 - 3rd Ave. W. Prince Rupert. B.C. hone 347 P.O. Bos 374 Colussi's Music Store Apents for the finest l:i Musical Instrument PIANOS TUNMD AND RECONDITIONED 2IO-4t.n Rf Ph. Black 330 GEORGE ROP.IE & CO. ACCOUNTAN 18 h AUDITORS Bcsner Block Phone 387 P.O. Box 130 HELEN'S BEAUTY SHOP Permanent Wavlrif? Beauty Culture In all Its branches 204 4lh Hi reel Plume flfi WE KENT TRUCKS, COMPRESSORS, CONCRETE MIXERS By hour, day or month Phone Blue 939 QUAIJTY REPAIRS For Downtrodden Heels and Worn Soles Box 774 Second Ave. MAC SHOE HOSPITAL B.C. MESSENGER For Prompt and Courteous Service Phone 678 214 4th St-cet Proprietor:.; Ed. Dawes. Sid All xr.nder PHONE BLUE 593 P O. BOX 1184 FI.ECTKOI.ux Sales and Servm R. W. COI i in "m , rhnr.c Elite 270 & -j for Renuine parts and J?"' phone or write aly f ' Brick, Stone and niurr Tile Sfttint! and Pn- K. SORENSE' Phone Iliu,' 81' HANDYMAf. HOME SERVIC GENERAL OONil'RAr Pudding and Repair, kinds roofs amrs:-; OIL BUKNEKS rilONES: P.O. Box 1670 I MATTSOHS UUIIOIisTI'HlNG Phone Blue 12(1 PO F. 234 3rd Ave. K Prince Rupert, B! H. G. HFLG'-RjC LIMITED REAL ESTATE fc INSLT. Phone 90 Evenings Bis Oil Heotina Servj LAWRIE M.CKAY. si-Blue 187 - B3X 6fjf Complete service in oil f. burners and stipp . Stoves, Heaters, Stow1! 4 Train Schedi s For the East Daily except Sunday.... From the F.at Dally except Monday K j J -- I h COOKIE becomes a Christian, he is a LOST Man's navv overcoat at new creature in Christ Jesus Valhalla Hall, New Year's Eve. j t2 Corinthians 5:17i. If bad or Finder please phone Red 517. poor, he needs reviving, not sav-tSpMing or converting. - j q0(j grau, ,le jewSi Moham into operation that month. j i For more than 2,400,000 work- ! ers in the engineering, shipbuild- ing, electrical goods, vehicles and ' metal industries, the increase -boosted the weekly wage bill fori the year by 1.300.000. To the individual it represented an av-' erage hike of about 11 shillings a week. - j The same increase granted railwaymen in November, not only increased the current wagel outlay by more than 160,000. but brought a weekly increase of 840,000 during the year to 1,270.000 transport and communications workers, It is estimated that the wage boost given mineworkers in De- : cember will cost the National Coal Board about 26,000.000 a year, adding another 500,000 to the nation's weekly pay-roll. A government wage concession to 600.000 civil servants is ex-, pected early in the new year. It j is exported the average increase will be around eight or nine per cent the largest civil service pay increase since the war. Repercussion In Forest License ! Repercussions are expected over the provincial government's decision to grant a forest management license in the Sumas Mountain area, near ChiUiwack. to " Clayburn Co. Ltd. of Matsqui, A Vancouver lawyer, represent -; ing five companies operating in I the general area, has tiled an ap- peal against the cabinet's deei-! sion approving Clayborn's application. The apoeal will be heard before the cabinet at a date yet to be fixed. The five protesting companies, believed all controlled by one man, are Mission Forest Products lit.. Mission Sawmills Ltd., Herman Sawmills Ltd , Collins and Mackin and the Skyline Logging Company. I Somo of the timber granted in the license is believed to have ! been sought by the Skyline. Log- , Ring Company last year. i It is understood there is a controversy going on in the communities In and around Mission. One faction is in favor of the license being granted, and another is not. Evans, Coleman and Evans Ltd. has an interest in Clayburn Co.' Ltd. - MONTREAL P Officials of the placement service at McGill j University estimate more than 1 1.000 students will go on the list seeking sparetime jobs to earn extra money. On New Year's Eve a flat $5 rate was paid for babysitters. , m t V JT - DINING PLEASURE IN SPARKLING NEW SURROUNDINGS Commodore Cafe Check Your Car for Vinler Driving Regular servicing of your car means lower operating costs. ChecK your lubrication, brakes and tires today for winter driving. Resolve for 1952 to have your car in top running condition every day of the year. Bob Parker Lid. FORI) - MONARCH "The Home of Friendly Service" BLONDIE Call 363 FOR BETTKK . . . Planning Building or Repairing MITCHELL & CURRIE LIMITED Iti.ildcrs & Contractors WRATH ALL'S Photo Finishing DEVELOPING, PRINTING ENLARGING EXPOSURE METERS AMATEUR SUPPLIES flump rirecn 136 tox 178 Shipping and Onrral Moving, fucking, ("rating. Cartage and StiiraRe Complete, Reliable and Efficient Service. Also agents fur Canadian Liquid Air Co. Ltd for Oxygen, Acetylene and all welding supplies. LINDSAY'S CARTAGE & STORAGE LIMITED Cor. 2nd ana Putk Avenues Est. 1910 Phiints dt) and (18 PLUMBING end HEATING The Reliable and Prompt Service . You Know PHONE For Repairs and Alterations Smith &Elkinslfd. P.O. Box 274 PORTRAITS Films Developed and Printed PROMPT SERVICE CHANDLER'S SIT DIO 216-4th Street Box 645 Phone Green 3hS Prince Rupert JOHN H. BULGER Opiomelrisi John Bulger Ltd. Third Avenue TO Buy TRADE trc. liKAL ESTATE FOR SALE-Fully modern home not be s0 may ,.ney be born with harbor view. Two bed- am - rooms, basement with hot-air t ' . , , furnace. Apply Prince Rupert I Hw (can Y church or de-Realty Co. (tl) 'nomination claim to be the soje Big British Wage Boosts By EDWIN S. JOHNSON Canadian Presji Stan" Writer LONDON CP' Approximately 12.000.000 British workers started the new year with something like 16.500,000 more in their weekly pay envelopes than they received last year to meet the rising cost of living. The increases, based on hew agreements negotiated in 1951, represent an average wage hike of about, eight per cent, a postwar record. By comparison the weekly pay rates were Increased by roughly two per cent in 1950. But how much last year's boost has added to the purchasing power of the average wage-earner, trade union leaders and economists were not prepared to say. Living costs, as measured by the interim index, they explain, have risen in about the same ra'io as wages. Latest published figures show the current wage index at 125 based on 100 1Q points higher than the level at the beginning of 1951. The interim 'price index for the same period increased approximately eight per cent. In a year studded with record wage advances, November stood out as the pay-boost record-breaker. In that month alone the weekly wage total increased nearly double the earlier peak of 717,000 a week, reached in March. The figure was only t'600.000 below the increase for ihe w hole of 1950. NOVI MI'.I K AWARDS The November increase was mainly due to the all-embracing round of wage awards to rail-waymen. engineering and ship- '52 Primaries Being Eyed WASHINGTON, DC The presidential primary, a 43-yeur-old experiment, is attracting new attention now that Gen. Dwiglit D. Eisenhower is in the ring for the Republican nomination. On March 11, New Hampshire voters will go to the polls to express their preferences for presidential nominees and select delegates to the national conventions. General Eisenhower's name will be presented there and there is ltttle doubt he will be nominated. Presidential primaries were started back in 1908, when Wisconsin held the first one. High hopes were held for them, not all of which materialized by any means. The idea was that the sovereign people would, by having their say, thwart the political bosses. But it was found that political machines could often work their will through primaries as well as through conventions. CONFUSING LAWS Laws in the 16 states that use presidential primaries are confusingly varied and sometimes ambiguous. In some casts, for exampie, citizens vote their presidential preferences while at the same time voting for convention delegates whose intentions they do not know. . All things concerned, the primary system as now practiced does not always give any clear indication of the nation's popular choices of nominees. Nor does it give any sure-fire tip on what the national conventions will do. For example, of the 496 delegates chosen by presidential primary for the Republican convention in 1948. only 153 from five states were definitely obligated to support the candidate favored by the voters In their states. Between March 11 and June 3, Republicans and Democrats will elect about half cf their national convention delegates by the primary method the Republicans 590 out of 1,199, and the Democrats 570 out of 1,234. STATE CONVENTIONS The remaining 43 states pick their delegates through state copventions, or In a few instances by state party committees- State committees have the option, rarely used, of holding primar ies In Alabama, Arkansas, and Georgia. After New Hampshire, the next presidential primary comes in Minnesota, March 18. Up to now, Minnesota has used the convention method. Until filing deadlines come along there can be no definite entries of candidates. On the Democratic side, the names of President Truman and Senator Estes Kefauver of Tennessee have been mentioned as possible entries, the latter in California. Neither has announced a willingness to run. Republican primary contesants with or without their consenf have bejn listed tentatively as Senatoi' Robert A. Taft of Ohio, General Eisenhower, Gov. Earl Warrn of California, Harold E. Stassen, and Gen. Douglas ANNOUNCEMENTS Catholic card party, January 10 Presbyterian Burns- Banquet, January 24. ! j Legion Card Party, January K,. Women's Hospnal Auxiliary Valentine Tea, February 14. : Annual Masonic ball, Friday, - February 15. "iT7 M"r., "' , United Church Leap Year tea.l Fcoruary 28. region auxiliary sprint? Sale, ' April 9. Job'-s Daughters Easter tea.! April 10. Noun; NOTICE VERY IMPORTANT i j ELKS MEETING Thursday I night. All members requested i to attend. 1 8c I I I l'iCKMINAL j DO YOU KNOW !r...:. v h.,v given away 51 free trips in I the past two days at "99"? Why not get in on a good tning? .9c. PRINCE RUPERT Hotel Dining Room serves business men's lunches at Very rca.sonahle prices. Hours 7 a.m. to !)::((! (tf. MALIi lll l,!' WAVii:i WANTED Experienced payroll clerk. We have a job for iwi months to -'tart immediately. Phone Red 592 for further information. 1 10c I m:n' h anh:i m .viai.i: STENOGRAPHER, p r e Yei .tblv W'ith experience. Apply to Northern B C. Power Co.' Ltd.. Room 15, Bcsner Block. (Ho APPLICATIONS will 'be rectived by the uncler.signed lor the position of clerk in the office ' of the Superintendent of Works, City Hall. Knowledge of typing essential. Apply in own handwriting stating age. marital status, 'qualifications and previous experience. D. C. Stewart, Superintendent of Works. (8c I GOOD home, wages included, for elderly woman who will take care of children while mother works. Box 277, Daily Ncv;. ( 12p) SITUATIONS WANTI I) YOUNG married man desires part-time work nights. Phone Hector, Red 932. 1 12pi FOil SALE FOR SALE Upright Mason & Risch piano in first class condition. Price $325.00. May be inspected bv phoning 60 for appointment. HOci FURNITURE for Sale Bedroom rufts, radios, cheat of drawers. airtiRht heaters, chesterlield beds complete, cribs, etc. Lowest possible prices. B C. Furniture Co. Third Ave. (tf) FOR SALE Men's Standard to L'.C.M. bike. Pbone Red 904. ' '(7pi FOR SALE Phiico mantel automatic radio combination. Phone Red 776 or call at 320 Bisgar Place. 8pi FOR SALE Bedroom suite, G.E. washing machine, twin beds, kitchen utensils, etc. Blue 186. (8pi FOR SALE 40 ft. diesel troller "Myrtle V." Phone Oreen 968 1 12oi FOR SALE Tenders will be re ceived by the undersigned up to noon Tuesday, January 22.1 in 1952, for the purchase of the hereunder described gasboat, together with gear and contents situated thereon. Name: Eagle. Length: 30 ft. 7 in. I Breadth: 9 ft. Depth: 4 ft. Powered by: 15-24 Easthope. Terms: Strictly cash. Highest or any tender not necessarily accepted, o. t. Forbes. Offi- al Administrator. Adminis- itor of the Estate of Albert uffy. Deceased. Court House. Prince Rupert, B.C. 1 10c BOYS' and girls' ski slacks, all wool, best quality made, all sizes, priced very reasonably. B. C. Clothiers. (tf) FOR SALE Nearly new 12 p-.iuge Stevens Pump gun with Polv-choke. Phone Green 973. (8e) CAKS FOIt KAI.E FOR SALE One 1950 Futtir-matie Oldsmobile sedan. Apnlv Dr. R. O. Large. (9c) of WANTF.D WANTED TOP MARKET PRICKS PAID for scran iron. 'i-r-i. uin, coilUI . lewi, cu; . v. Honest, grading Promn' txiv-U ment made. Atlns Iron Si Metals Ltd.. !!50 Prior tjt Vancouver. B. C. Phone PAeific 6357 . (tf CASri for Krtin cost. bra.ss. courier, batteries nnd radiators. Pl-nnii cut cnii c.ir. r.u, ..,, West, CUV. (tf) 1 . for SALE Five room house. I 1026 Hlh Ave. East. ,8P' I Photos Preserve Ontario History RADIO DIAL CFPR 1240 Kilocvcies (Subject Iv Change) WEDNESDAY PM 5:20 Intermit tonul Commentary S:M Have You Heard 6.45 Question Bux 6:00 Supper Serenade 6:15 Hawaiian Melodies S::10 Musical Varieties 6 15 HtmI'v Burnett.e Show 7:00 CHC News 7:15 CBC News Rmmctup 7:30 Rfcual BOO The Poetry of Frank Scott 8:30 The Best of All Possible Worlds 10:00 CBC News 10:10 CBC News 10:15 Supplement 10 30 Sun.g Quartet 1 1 :00 Weather Hrport. !UHt .SilOt-otT THUHKDAV A.M. 7 (10 Musical Clock 8:00 IHC News 8:10 Here's Bill Ooocl 8 1 ;i Mornliif; Stiiifi 8:30 M'iriuIlK lJeVotlons 8:45 1. K tie c:oneert 9 00 1IIIC News and Conmientary 9:15 Music lor Moderns U:;i .Sunrise yerenade Time Hiaoal HI (10 Morning Visit io!is Hitlers of Purple Sae io::iu This Week's Artist 10:45 Musical Program 1 1 110 Kinderearlen of (he Air Ills ItiiuiKliip rJ line 1 1 :30 Weather Report J 1 :31 MrsMiuc Period 1 1 33 Recorded Interlude 11:45 .Scandinavian Melodies P M 12:00 Middle day Melodies ia:tr. NcWS i-j-iir, Pr. i : ram ltesiime la :10 n ;. Farm Broadcast. I 55 Recorded interlude 1 (III Aiternoon Concert 1:45 Lleeds That Live 2 00 School broadcast 2 3(1 Records at ivandolft 3 :()( The Music Box 3 30 ftolo CUiest 3 45 Novel Time 4 (HI Su.i.shrne Socli-l.y 4 31. Uead Mali's Island 4 45 Sloek Qiloladons; Interludo 4 :M CHC News I.KTTKItBOX (Continued from page 2) Once a man is born again and medans ana all pagans may is- : oent and be converted hut, it will luuuweis or uie iura uesus Christ? I do not write these things to find fault but simply to point out the truth that the whole world knows. I know it is asking a lot of you, Mr. Editor, to print this in your paper but surely this is a free country and we Protestants have ul uuu- 11 ,lul. we wm suon lose the previous heritage Vhich is ours the glorious heritage, the Faith of Our Fathers. ' A. THOMPSON. CANADIAN SERVICES (Continued from page 2) . ; , , . t? ew pieces of planking "By ,"ule. Canada's Search and Rescue organization first took shape in 1946 when she made a commitment to the International Civil Aviation Organization to provide such facilities on the east shore. This was later extended to cover the west coast and Canada herself took on the responsibility of extending the organization across the country. Search and Rescue operates on a 24-hour-a-day basis. It has five rescue co-ordination centres each responsible for a huee area Thirty - four planes of various arv facilities" t4l There are 42 specially-trained four nursino sisters and 11 train. ed ground Search and Rescue parties of 10 men each. Also available are the facilities of the navy on both coasts as well as inland, the army, the R.C.M.P. and government departments which have stations and equipment across the country. Once a plane is unreported for 30 minutes a "stale of uncertainty" is declared and the organization prepares planes and men. This is followed by a "state of alert" after which a search is begun. Once it starts the real job of the co-ordination centres begins. Reports come from farmers, police and others in the search area and all this information has to be checked and cross-checked. How long an unsuccessful search is maintained depends on a number of factors. Elapsed time, conditions of the country and chancps of survival all are considered. The guiding rule of Search and Rescue is that human life cannot be measured in dollars and cents. While there is any hope at all, the search coes on. TORONTO (CP) Historical re- ( tne riKht to sPeak the truth. es-search in photography is a pro- i pecially as we find it in the word For the MEAL that REFRESH! BEST OF FOOD ject with the Women's Institutes ' and a hobby with its Ontar.o director. Anna P. Lewis. With the combined effort of institute members, community history in ."crapbook form is Deing compiled. Miss Lewis, an inveterate photographer, is always seeking anything of historical interest snap while travelling from j county to county on institute business. As an entertainment leature at her meetings, she occasionally shows her own interesting collection of pictures. "Ontario is full of these reminders of the horse and buggy days, but no one thinks much about them we should do something about preserving them while there is yet time," she says. Miss Lewis photograpn.- " j them FOR TAKE Oil ORDERS PHONE 230 BROADWAY CAFE For New Construction and Repair Work One of her views of Yonge j at Halifax, Trenton. Out. Winni-Street includes a Quaker meet-! peg, Edmonton and Vancouver. '"8 house at Newmarket, built S 1809 by the Pennsylvania j GREER & BRIDDEN LTD Quakers who settled there in j types and 10 high-speed laun-1801. At Holland Landing she ' ehes specially-equipped for the (Photographed an old anchor WOrk are maintained as ".nrim- riione !tfl!t 215 1st Ave. v. SEE r.o. bii loriiia f Ladies and Gent!e LING; the failorl 220 Sixth St. r Bv CHIC YOUNf . . . - I'm oprtFPiNk; ; 1 . Ti'lD TuiC DT A Chinese DISHES Chop Suey - Chow Meio Open 6 p.m. . 3:30 m.m. HOLLYWOOD CAFE For Outside Orders Phone 13S AMD FOUI? . ini iADTC r.rr dozen wxlsKK, VI NU-NU- 7- ? V which was drawn by horse and 1 sleiRh all the way from King- i ston in 1812 lor a man-ol-war which was never built. She also has pictures of Can-1 ada s first oil well, the first on the North American continent. Drilled not far from Sarnia in 1858. The first salt well was opened in 1836 near Goderich. She has a picture of it. Other shots show a cairn near Bath, a reminder of the days when it was a boom town where the steamship Frontenac was launched: the old coach road from Bath to Adolphustown, built in 1798 under government contract by Isa Danforth; St. Andrew's Catholic Church near Cornwall, built in 1784, whose graveyard contaias the remains John Stand field Macdonald, Ontario's first premier, and the explorer Simon Fuser. Another picture is a shot of Ottawa's first home, a great tone house built bv Colonel Bv. founder of tile capital city and builder of the Rideau Canal. One shot is even of a tree, commemorating the discovery of the Mcintosh apple la Dundas, county. Why Husbands Aqe Young : ' illHMI" 1 I'LL TAKE FIFTtfcN :l'-'' ' ' ' POUNDS OF HAMBURGER ) GREAT SCOTT") FRANKFURTERS H 1,1 A4 . f fcritf . Tmt i rr